It can't be a good day for American soccer when one of its liveliest and most knowledgeable general managers is summarily fired. OK, he may well be one of
the prickliest GMs, too. It's Kevin Payne I'm talking about, suddenly defenestrated by Toronto.

What is it about Toronto that they (whoever “they” may be), having gotten
themselves involved in the global game, seem unable to think beyond the boundaries of a local businessman? And a pretty poor businessman, at that.

The playing record of the club is
appalling -- that hardly needs stressing yet again. Nor does the extraordinary support that the long-suffering Toronto fans have given the team. What does need hammering home is that a successful team
in MLS cannot be -- or is highly unlikely to be -- built on a cozy arrangement of ethnic connections and old-pal player signings.

I would have thought that much would have been obvious by
now. But there must be something in the Toronto atmosphere that clouds it. For when Payne moved to Toronto his first step was to hire Ryan Nelsen as coach. A move that simply staggered. An old-pal of
Payne’s, Nelsen had no coaching experience at all. Payne, with a straight face, praised Nelsen as someone who, as a player, had once been caught reading a book on soccer tactics.

But the most worrying thing about Nelsen was that he very much represented a continuation of the club’s doleful policy of relying on Brits -- in this case a heavily Brit-influenced New
Zealander.

Four months ago I expressed my bewilderment at the situation, dubbing
it a “right royal muddle.” It has worsened since then, as the team has continued to labor, and an inexplicable assortment of players has come -- and some of them already gone -- in a
futile attempt to stop the rot.

As a spectacular example of precisely what should not have happened, but did happen, we have Toronto reverting to the worst of its defects. Coach
Nelsen making the now obligatory old-pal ethnic signing, and bringing in Jeremy Brockie. Virtually unknown outside of New Zealand, Brockie was hailed by Nelsen as a player who “works really
hard. He is a really hard guy as well and won’t back down from anything.” Great. Brockie, as could surely have been predicted, was a non-event, playing 15 games for Toronto, contributing
little and scoring just one goal. Having signed Brockie, Nelsen then traded away promising American youngster Luis Silva to D.C. United.

Meanwhile Payne, we learn, was trying to sign
Diego Forlan, a move that stalled and contributed to Payne’s downfall. But why does Payne get the axe, while Nelsen stays on as coach?

That needs considerable explanation -- but
club president Tim Leiweke says nothing more than that he and Nelsen are “on the same page.” Cliches evidently come easily up in Toronto, for Leiweke then informs us that, with
Payne’s departure, “the team will be moving in a different direction.” Well, yes -- considering that Toronto’s direction in the standings has always tended to be downward, the
idea that an upward direction would be better is hardly a revelation.

What would be much more helpful from Leiweke would be details of just what this new “direction” entails.
And I mean details. Announcing an overall policy of wanting to reward fans, or of wanting to win things, gets us nowhere. It is, frankly, downright insulting to these Toronto fans who have heard all
this guff before and seen it evaporate into inaction, while they have put up with season after season of the same old same old.

Leiweke seems completely shot in the backside with Nelsen
as coach, which is hard to explain, given the club’s rotten record under Nelsen -- they’ve won only four games so far this season, the sort of record that usually gets coaches fired. But
not in Toronto. Again it’s the details that are missing. Exactly what is it about Nelsen’s coaching that Leiweke finds so entrancing? Because it surely cannot be anything that
Leiweke has seen on the field so far. The team has assuredly not been fun to watch.

But Leiweke is promising immediate action, and of course the magic word “Europe” surfaces
at once when it comes to looking for players. Which must raise the ominous suspicion that Nelsen will be targeting EPL players. Or ex-players. And Nelsen has an obvious preference for
“hard” players. Players in his own image, in other words -- and Nelsen was never a player you’d want to rely on as a crowd-puller.

What we’ve seen so far from
Nelsen the coach is unsophisticated stuff -- plenty of long-balls, plenty of getting stuck in. Nor can it be argued that Nelsen had to work with players who were already at the club -- he has brought
in plenty of his own choices. Prime among those choices being the totally unsatisfactory Brockie.

So there we are. A new GM will be signed, but he’s going to have to work with the
in-a-hurry Leiweke, anxious to be seen as a decisive Alexander cutting the Gordian knot of Toronto’s soccer problems, to give the impression that he knows exactly where he’s going with
this club.

Does he? All we have to go on is, firstly, that Leiweke has fired Payne -- but that sounds more like a personality clash than anything to do with soccer. And secondly that
Nelsen will be retained -- and if that is a soccer decision, there is nothing to say that it is a good one. Persisting with Nelsen as coach does not look like a new direction.

Sometimes I read PG's articles just to get a sense of the non-vernacular: "It's Kevin Payne I'm talking about, suddenly defenestrated by Toronto." Defenestrate, I love that word! I'll be using all week next week. Thanks, Paul!

Allan Lindh

commented on: September 6, 2013 at 12:58 p.m.

Too damn grumpy. The reality is that in a competitive sport, some teams will win most of their games, and some will lose most of theirs. That does not make the teams that are at the bottom bad teams run by bad people, it's just that they aren't as good as the best teams -- it's just numbers. Simply does not provide grounds for calling people names -- this is a bad column, and in the spirit of the column, maybe time SA considering setting Mr. Gardner on the bench for a while. At least cut his rants down to once a month.

Kevin Leahy

commented on: September 6, 2013 at 3:09 p.m.

For the last decade or so, Payne's track record has not been good. D.C.United has been a mess for a while now and he did not do much for Toronto. The lack of scouting seems to be a serious downfall for both of these clubs. I don't know where the playmakers are hiding but, these two clubs are still looking.

Jogo Bonito

commented on: September 8, 2013 at 8:58 a.m.

PG is right. Toronto is a mess. I'm sure if you speak to the local soccer people that so passionately love the game they will agree with this piece. I'll never understand the North American fascination with Brits. Especially when it comes to soccer. The EPL is a great league. I love the history and whole production, but there's no value in trying "reproduce" the EPL here.
Toronto does a poor job of understanding what produces watchable soccer. If they had a clue, they would find a coach that values possessing the ball and players that can keep the ball. Jason Kreis never coached, but we gets it. They're out there

Peter Mahon

commented on: September 8, 2013 at 7:29 p.m.

PG is absolutely right. Toronto is the best argument for a relegation system in MLS. Leiwicki will not solve anything. He is going to blow his budget on dps and forget about the fact that there are 8 other positions on the field that need to be filled competently, not to mention a decent coach.

Peter Mahon

commented on: September 8, 2013 at 7:57 p.m.

We don't need DPs,...yet. We need a competent team. We don't need more night games or a better fan experience. We just need hope. As for "atmosphere", when we get something to care about, we can provide that ourselves.

I w Nowozeniuk

commented on: September 12, 2013 at 10:26 a.m.

Allan, I beg to differ. team tactics adapted to the IQ of the squad dictates success or failure. Simplicity and efficacy are one and the same when it comes to performance and winning. Toronto FC has some quality players, but the soccer IQ is mediocre.

ekozilien lilly

commented on: September 15, 2013 at 9:04 p.m.

Computer remote control a device that controls the binary code of a computer and gains access into the central processing unit just like the television remote control.this is a wireless device for integration into website channels